Nation has to stand by security forces, not terrorists: Madhav
AGENCY
Hyderabad: The country has to stand by the security forces and not terrorists, BJP General Secretary Ram Madhav said on Sunday in the wake of violence which claimed 46 lives in Kashmir Valley following the killing of Hizbul Mujahideen commander Burhan Wani.
“In 1994, a unanimous resolution was passed in Parliament that the only outstanding issue between India and Pakistan is with respect to PoK. We tell our BJP-PDP government in J&K that you don’t have any ‘locus standi’ when it comes to India and Pakistan. It will be dealt with by the Government of India,” Madhav said here.
“But, we all have to understand our outstanding issue is not Kashmir. It is ours. When I say it is ours, I am not talking of geography alone but I am also talking about the demography. When I say Kashmir is ours, the people of Kashmir are also ours. This message has to be loud and clear,” he said.
“If today some of them are on a wrong path, we will set them on right path. Have faith. People in PoK are also our people. We have to get that. But our problem is that in media studios, Wani is our man, not the peace-loving people of the state…some of them are violent, but many of them are peace loving,” he said.
“There were 14 criminal cases against him (Wani), including attacks on army, police and killing of constable.
These are very serious cases. He is a terrorist on whose head there was Rs 10 lakh reward,” he said.
“One parliamentarian says you should have captured him and arrested him. During an encounter when bullets are flying do you check the bio-data while shooting?” he asked.
“Our soldiers, policemen, para-military personnel who went to capture him only know how to act against a terrorist.
The country has to stand by the security forces and not terrorists,” he said.
Madhav further said Home Minister Rajnath Singh is camping in J&K and holding discussions to bring peace in the state.
Life in Kashmir has been paralysed since July 9, a day after Wani was killed in an encounter with security forces.
“Today we are very pragmatic in our foreign policy… We know how to deal with our neighbours. America advises us that dialogue is the only option. We will hold dialogue when required… Our Prime Minister is not a ‘mauni swami’. But we will talk on our terms,” Madhav said, delivering a talk on ‘Look East, Act East, What Next?’, organised by NGO Awareness in Action here.
“We converted the 1971 war victory into a diplomatic defeat through the 1973 Shimla agreement. This was a classic case of romanticism taking over pragmatism. Over 90,000 Pakistani PoWs (Prisoners of war)… You had a wonderful opportunity to free PoK from Pakistan. But we agreed to release all of them without getting anything in return. We are paying the price for it even 40 years after that in J&K.
“Today, the Prime Minister of Pakistan says he is dreaming for the day when Kashmir in India is united with Kashmir in Pakistan… Our Foreign Minister will answer him and that’s all. This is called pragmatism,” he said.
“We have to talk with Pakistan… We will talk. I am not saying we should not talk. We will talk on our terms,” he said.
Countries need a strategic culture, he said.
“Unfortunately in our country strategic culture was not developed. On strategic issues…whether it is our relationship with Pakistan or with China or with another country, our whole thinking is more romantic or idealistic.